Press Release
March 6, 2007

Morrow, GA…Work and the workplace have gone through enormous changes between the mid-19th century, when 60 percent of Americans made their living as farmers, and the late 20th century. A new traveling exhibition, “The Way We Worked,” features 86 photographs from the National Archives focusing on the history of work in America and documenting work clothing, locales, conditions, and conflicts. The exhibition will
open on March 10, 2007, at the National Archives Southeast Region, as part
of a 14-city national tour continuing through 2010. It will be on display
through May 20, 2007.

“The Way We Worked” was created by the National Archives with
the support of the Foundation for the National Archives, and is organized for
travel by the Smithsonian Institution Traveling Exhibition Service (SITES).
The exhibition was originally on view from December 2005 through May 2006 at
the Lawrence F. O’Brien Gallery at the National Archives Building in
Washington, DC.

As the depository for historically valuable Federal records, the National
Archives is home to thousands of photographs of work and workplaces taken by
government agencies for many reasons: to investigate factory safety,
track construction progress, office training or to emphasize the continuing
importance of humans in a technologically modern environment. The images
featured in “The Way We Worked,” though possibly taken merely for
purposes of record keeping, often reveal much more about how social forces
such as immigration, gender, ethnicity, class, and technology have transformed
the workforce.

The exhibition
is divided into five sections:

“WHERE We Worked” explores the places Americans worked, from farms to factories, mines to restaurants, as well as how race and gender
often determined roles and status.

“HOW We Worked” examines the effects of technology and automation on the workplace with images of people on assembly lines or using their tools
of trade.

“What We WORE to Work” looks at the way uniforms serve as badges of authority and status, and help make occupations immediately identifiable.

“CONFLICT at Work” looks back at not just the inevitable clashes between workers and managers over working conditions, wages, and hours, but
also how social conflicts, such as segregation, have influenced the workplace.

“DANGEROUS or UNHEALTHY Work” features many of the photographs taken by social reformers hoping to ban child labor, reduce the length of the work
day and expose unsanitary workplaces.

Spanning the years 1857-1987, the images in the exhibition cover the entire
range of photographs on the topic in the National Archives holdings.

The National Archives and Records Administration serves American democracy
by safeguarding and preserving the records of our Government, ensuring that
the people can discover, use, and learn from this documentary heritage. Among
the billions of records at the National Archives are more than 11 million still
pictures in the Washington, DC, area alone. In addition, there are
millions of photographs in the National Archives Presidential libraries and
millions more among the records held by regional archives.

SITES has been sharing the wealth of Smithsonian collections and research
programs with millions of people outside Washington, DC, for more than fifty
years. SITES connects Americans to their shared cultural heritage through
a wide range of exhibitions about art, science and history, which are shown
wherever people live, work, and play. Exhibition descriptions and tour
schedules are available at www.sites.si.edu.

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For further information, contact Mary Evelyn Tomlin, Public Programs Specialist,
at 770-968-2555 or by e-mail at mary.tomlin@nara.gov.